176 results match your criteria: "New Mexico Highlands University[Affiliation]"

Using the Culturally Engaging Campus Environments (CECE) Model, this qualitative study examined development of psychosocial attributes (i.e., sense of belonging, science identity, and self-efficacy) among 1st-year life science undergraduate students who participated in integrated and culturally engaging research activities at New Mexico Highlands University, a rural Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI).

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Non-canonical nucleobase pairs differ from canonical Watson-Crick (WC) pairs in their hydrogen bonding patterns. This study uses density functional theory with empirical dispersion correction to examine the stability and electronic properties of free adenine dimers stabilized by hydrogen bonds along the WC, Sugar (S), and Hoogsteen (H) edges. Dispersion correction is crucial for accurate interaction energy evaluation.

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This study focuses on the development of environmentally sustainable polypropylene (PP)-based composites with the potential for biodegradability by incorporating cellulose and the oligomeric siloxane ES-40. Targeting industrial applications such as fused deposition modeling (FDM) 3D printing, ES-40 was employed as a precursor for the in situ formation of silica particles via hydrolytic polycondensation (HPC). Two HPC approaches were investigated: a preliminary reaction in a mixture of cellulose, ethanol, and water, and a direct reaction within the molten PP matrix.

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Article Synopsis
  • Measuring the growth rate of microorganisms is crucial for understanding their role in ecosystems, as it reflects their resource use, biomass production, and impact on elements essential for life.
  • Microbial adaptability determines their success, where rapid reproduction in favorable conditions and survival strategies in harsher conditions are linked to their relative growth rates.
  • Advanced techniques like omics and stable isotope probing allow scientists to analyze microbial growth in soil, helping to connect microbial diversity and environmental factors to important ecosystem processes like carbon flux and nutrient cycling.
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Departures from monogamy are socially discouraged and met with negative judgments, and being a target of stigmatization has consequences for the way individuals in consensual non-monogamous (CNM) relationships connect to others, including their partner(s). However, social support seems to be an important factor associated with increases in wellbeing and relationship quality. Aligned with this reasoning, results of a cross-sectional study showed that participants in CNM relationships who endorsed more internalized negativity reported less commitment to partner one (P1), less disclosure of their relationship agreement to others, as well as less acceptance and more secrecy toward P1 and partner two (P2).

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Thinning woody biomass to reduce wildfire risk has become a common forest management prescription throughout the Intermountain West. Converting the resulting slash into biochar, a carbon-rich soil amendment, could help mitigate some of the shortcomings of other fuel treatments, but land managers in the western United States have not widely adopted biochar, despite its potential benefits and new government incentives. Thus, we investigated the often under-studied sociocultural, economic, and biophysical barriers to biochar production and identified important factors to inform future outreach efforts that will help to expand biochar production from thinning slash in northern New Mexico.

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The crystal structures of two inter-mediates, 4-amino-3,5-di-fluoro-benzo-nitrile, CHFN (), and ethyl 4-amino-3,5-di-fluoro-benzoate, CHFNO (), along with a visible-light-responsive azo-benzene derivative, diethyl 4,4'-(diazene-1,2-di-yl)bis-(3,5-di-fluoro-benzoate), CHFNO (), obtained by four-step synthetic procedure, were studied using single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The mol-ecules of and demonstrate the quinoid character of phenyl rings accompanied by the distortion of bond angles related to the presence of fluorine substituents in the 3 and 5 () positions. In the crystals of and , the mol-ecules are connected by N-H⋯N, N-H⋯F and N-H⋯O hydrogen bonds, C-H⋯F short contacts, and π-stacking inter-actions.

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A database of vegetation treatments in New Mexico, USA and surrounding regions.

Data Brief

August 2024

New Mexico Forest and Watershed Restoration Institute, New Mexico Highlands University, Box 9000, Las Vegas, NM 87701, United States.

Active management practices to reduce or promote particular vegetation, known as vegetation treatments, are a common part of environmental management and they are conducted for a variety of purposes including wildfire risk mitigation, invasive species management, and ecological restoration. Vegetation treatment for wildfire mitigation in particular have increased dramatically in the Western United States in the past several decades. While vegetation treatments are common, data regarding the timing, location, and type of treatments conducted are often only maintained by the organization that conducted the work, hampering the ability of managers and researchers to understand the distribution and timing of vegetation treatments across a landscape.

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The title compound, systematic name tris-(μ-perfluoro--phenyl-ene)(μ-3-phenyl-4-chromen-4-one)--trimercury, [Hg(CF)(CHO)], crystallizes in the monoclinic 2/ space group with one flavone (FLA) and one cyclic trimeric perfluoro--phenyl-enemercury (TPPM) mol-ecule per asymmetric unit. The FLA mol-ecule is located on one face of the TPPM acceptor and is linked in an asymmetric coordination of its carbonyl oxygen atom with two Hg centers of the TPPM macrocycle. The angular-shaped complexes pack in zigzag chains where they stack two alternating TPPM-TPPM and FLA-FLA stacking patterns.

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With high fatality and no cure, chronic wasting disease (CWD) has infected cervids in multiple regions, including the United States, Canada, Europe, and South Korea. Despite the rapid growth of literature on CWD, the full scope of its ecological, social, and economic impacts and the most effective and socially acceptable management strategies to mitigate the disease is unclear. Of 3008 initially identified published peer-reviewed papers, 134 were included in a final systematic literature review to synthesize the current knowledge on CWD transmission patterns, impacts, and the effectiveness of management interventions.

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A Cu coordination polymer, -poly[[[aqua-copper(II)]-bis-(μ-4-amino-benz-o-ato)-κ :;κ :] monohydrate], {[Cu(ABA)(HO)]·HO} (ABA = -amino-benzoate, CHNO ), was synthesized and characterized. It exhibits a one-dimensional chain structure extended into a three-dimensional supra-molecular assembly through hydrogen bonds and π-π inter-actions. While the twinned crystal shows a metrically ortho-rhom-bic lattice and an apparent space group , the true symmetry is monoclinic (space group 2/), with disordered Cu atoms and mixed roles of water mol-ecules (aqua ligand/crystallization water).

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Arsenic exposure is associated with alterations to multiple red blood cell parameters among adults in rural Bangladesh.

Toxicol Appl Pharmacol

March 2024

Mailman University School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA. Electronic address:

Chronic arsenic exposures are associated with multiple hematologic disturbances, including anemia. The goal of this study was to evaluate associations between arsenic exposures and hematological parameters among men and women who are chronically exposed to elevated levels of arsenic from drinking water. Hematologic analyses were performed on blood collected from 755 participants (45% male and 54% female) in the Health Effects of Arsenic Longitudinal Study (HEALS) cohort, Bangladesh.

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Article Synopsis
  • Interest in consensually non-monogamous (CNM) relationships is rising, but monogamy remains the societal standard, leading to negative experiences for those in CNM setups.
  • The study found that beliefs in mononormativity and stigma against CNM relationships are linked to increased feelings of internalized negativity among CNM individuals.
  • This internalized negativity, in turn, affects how they view themselves and their partners, leading to more negative emotions and dehumanizing attitudes.
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And Harm Reduction for All.

Health Promot Pract

November 2023

New Mexico Highlands University, Las Vegas, NM, USA.

The Harm Reduction Act, a groundbreaking piece of legislation in New Mexico, provided for the legal use of paraphernalia by New Mexican residents so long as they could present their yellow sharps cards. Unfortunately, tribal governments in New Mexico were not consulted in these changes in harm reduction practices. As a result, Native American persons in New Mexico cannot access harm reduction services as freely as any other New Mexican can-and harm reduction programs are desperately needed in New Mexico.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on the synthesis and electrochemical properties of various benzoimidazole compounds, which are being explored as n-dopants in organic electron-transport materials.
  • It highlights that 2-aryl substituents stabilize radicals more effectively than 2-alkyl groups, leading to different reactivity patterns in reactions with PCBM and other compounds.
  • The findings reveal significant differences in reactivity based on structural modifications, with certain dimers demonstrating faster reaction rates and unique electrochemical characteristics, as confirmed through crystal structure analysis.
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Wildlife diseases are a major global threat to biodiversity. Boreal toads (Anaxyrus [Bufo] boreas) are a state-endangered species in the southern Rocky Mountains of Colorado and New Mexico, and a species of concern in Wyoming, largely due to lethal skin infections caused by the amphibian chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd). We performed conservation and landscape genomic analyses using single nucleotide polymorphisms from double-digest, restriction site-associated DNA sequencing in combination with the development of the first boreal toad (and first North American toad) reference genome to investigate population structure, genomic diversity, landscape connectivity and adaptive divergence.

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Despite tremendous diversity, Asian Americans in STEM are grouped and viewed as a homogeneous monolith, facing stereotypes and disparities. We propose solutions that include disaggregating the Asian American grouping and recognizing the diverse individual ethnic subgroups that comprise Americans of Asian ancestry to implement change within the STEM field.

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Successful establishment of seedlings in the southwestern United States is often limited by stressful and harsh site conditions related to drought severity and severe disturbances such as wildfire and mining operations. Seedling quality has an important influence on outplanting performance, but nursery practices that typically employ optimal growing environments may also be limiting seedling morphological and physiological performance on stressful outplanting sites. To address this, a study was established to test alterations in seedling characteristics subjected to irrigation limitations during nursery culture and their subsequent outplanting performance.

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Bacterial endosymbionts can provide benefits for their eukaryotic hosts, but it is often unclear if endosymbionts benefit from these relationships. The social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum associates with three species of Paraburkholderia endosymbionts, including P. agricolaris and P.

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Using quotients as a mentor to facilitate the success of underrepresented students.

Pathog Dis

January 2023

Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37212, United States.

Choosing a mentor requires a certain level of introspection for both the mentor and the mentee. The dynamics of mentorship may change depending on the academic status of the mentee. Regardless, mentors should help their trainees grow both academically and professionally.

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Severe and frequent heat and drought events challenge the survival and development of long-generation trees. In this study, we investigated the genomic basis of heat tolerance, water use efficiency and growth by performing genome-wide association studies in coastal Douglas-fir () and intervarietal ( × ) hybrid seedlings. GWAS results identified 32 candidate genes involved in primary and secondary metabolism, abiotic stress and signaling, among other functions.

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Chronic arsenic exposures via the consumption of contaminated drinking water are clearly associated with many deleterious health outcomes, including anemia. Following exposure, trivalent inorganic arsenic (As) is methylated through a series of arsenic (+III oxidation state) methyltransferase (As3MT)-dependent reactions, resulting in the production of several intermediates with greater toxicity than the parent inorganic arsenicals. The extent to which inorganic vs.

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Spatiotemporally functionalized hydrogels have exciting applications in tissue engineering, but their preparation often relies on radical-based strategies that can be deleterious in biological settings. Herein, the computationally guided design, synthesis, and application of a water-soluble cyclopentadienone-norbornadiene (CPD-NBD) adduct is disclosed as a diene photocage for radical-free Diels-Alder photopatterning. We show that this scalable CPD-NBD derivative is readily incorporated into hydrogel formulations, providing gels that can be patterned with dienophiles upon 365 nm uncaging of cyclopentadiene.

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Deriving calibrations for Arawakan using archaeological evidence.

Interface Focus

February 2023

Department of Comparative Language Science and Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Language Evolution, University of Zurich, CH-8050 Zurich, Switzerland.

This paper identifies time calibration points for accurately rooting and dating the phylogeny of Arawakan, the largest Indigenous linguistic family of the Americas. We present and model a methodology for extracting calibration points from the archaeological record, based on principles of geographical overlap between archaeological sites and Arawakan peoples, and on continuity in material culture between archaeological finds and modern Arawakan practices. Based on a consensus model of the expansion of the Arawakan family from Central Amazonia, we focus on archaeological finds in Arawakan expansion zones, where Arawakan material culture abruptly appears in a given region, and where only a single major Arawakan subgroup/clade is present.

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In lizards there is considerable variation in the ability to dissipate environmental/endogenous heat loads through evaporative cooling via panting, which effects how long lizards can spend exposed to high solar heat loads. We recently described the differing capacities of lizards to depress body temperature (Tb) through evaporative cooling via panting. Here, we link panting and Tb depression with rates of evaporative water loss and its metabolic costs under high heat loads.

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